The Version numbers read/write command line tool finds and updates version number tokens in source code or packaging files. It takes filename context and syntax into account for reading and writing to files. It provides an easy and readable argument format, and can increase patch versions or bump build numbers. It's a minor simplification for manual package building.

au is a little script to make ffmpeg easier to use for common audio manipulations like cutting to a specific number of beats at a set BPM, volume adjustments, joining files together, and converting between file formats or between mono and stereo.

tblutils is a collection of several utilities for working with tabular text files: data written in plain text, with one row per line and columns separated by a common character (usually TAB or semicolon). It complements the usual Unix tools like cut and paste by providing enhanced versions that support column labels through-out, so that you can extract columns by name (tblcut), filter data using a mathematical expression (tblfilter), re-order columns without caring about the column index (tblcsort), join multiple files on a common index without having to pre-sort them (tblmerge), and much more.

springclean is a command line tool for cleaning up log files. It can select files based on name (exact or regex), age, or a combination of both. You can preview changes, and confirm before running each action. For each action you can find how much disk space has been freed, compress, move to another directory or remove your files, and create an audit trail with syslog.

Sanzang is a compact and simple cross-platform machine translation system. It is especially useful for translating from the CJK languages (Chinese, Japanese, and Korean), and it is very suitable for working with ancient and otherwise difficult texts. Unlike most other machine translation systems, Sanzang is small and approachable. Any user can develop his or her own translation rules, and these rules are simply stored in a text file and applied at runtime.

res is a tiny commandline HTTP client.
It lets you easily interact with HTTP calls quickly within your terminal.
It's built on top of the requests library and meant to be a commandline wrapper for requests.